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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(23): e202400495, 2024 Jun 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38568047

RESUMO

Over the last two decades ratchet mechanisms have transformed the understanding and design of stochastic molecular systems-biological, chemical and physical-in a move away from the mechanical macroscopic analogies that dominated thinking regarding molecular dynamics in the 1990s and early 2000s (e.g. pistons, springs, etc), to the more scale-relevant concepts that underpin out-of-equilibrium research in the molecular sciences today. Ratcheting has established molecular nanotechnology as a research frontier for energy transduction and metabolism, and has enabled the reverse engineering of biomolecular machinery, delivering insights into how molecules 'walk' and track-based synthesisers operate, how the acceleration of chemical reactions enables energy to be transduced by catalysts (both motor proteins and synthetic catalysts), and how dynamic systems can be driven away from equilibrium through catalysis. The recognition of molecular ratchet mechanisms in biology, and their invention in synthetic systems, is proving significant in areas as diverse as supramolecular chemistry, systems chemistry, dynamic covalent chemistry, DNA nanotechnology, polymer and materials science, molecular biology, heterogeneous catalysis, endergonic synthesis, the origin of life, and many other branches of chemical science. Put simply, ratchet mechanisms give chemistry direction. Kinetic asymmetry, the key feature of ratcheting, is the dynamic counterpart of structural asymmetry (i.e. chirality). Given the ubiquity of ratchet mechanisms in endergonic chemical processes in biology, and their significance for behaviour and function from systems to synthesis, it is surely just as fundamentally important. This Review charts the recognition, invention and development of molecular ratchets, focussing particularly on the role for which they were originally envisaged in chemistry, as design elements for molecular machinery. Different kinetically asymmetric systems are compared, and the consequences of their dynamic behaviour discussed. These archetypal examples demonstrate how chemical systems can be driven inexorably away from equilibrium, rather than relax towards it.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(22): e202402965, 2024 May 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38533678

RESUMO

The development of synthetic active matter requires the ability to design materials capable of harnessing energy from a source to carry out work. Nature achieves this using chemical reaction cycles in which energy released from an exergonic chemical reaction is used to drive biochemical processes. Although many chemically fuelled synthetic reaction cycles that control transient responses, such as self-assembly, have been reported, the generally high complexity of the reported systems hampers a full understanding of how the available chemical energy is actually exploited by these systems. This lack of understanding is a limiting factor in the design of chemically fuelled active matter. Here, we report a minimalistic synthetic responsive reaction cycle in which adenosine diphosphate (ADP) triggers the formation of a catalyst for its own hydrolysis. This establishes an interdependence between the concentrations of the network components resulting in the transient formation of the catalyst. The network is sufficiently simple that all kinetic and thermodynamic parameters governing its behaviour can be characterised, allowing kinetic models to be built that simulate the progress of reactions within the network. While the current network does not enable the ADP-hydrolysis reaction to populate a non-equilibrium composition, these models provide insight into the way the network dissipates energy. Furthermore, essential design principles are revealed for constructing driven systems, in which the network composition is driven away from equilibrium through the consumption of chemical energy.

3.
Nat Rev Chem ; 8(1): 8-29, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38102412

RESUMO

Synthetic chemistry has traditionally relied on reactions between reactants of high chemical potential and transformations that proceed energetically downhill to either a global or local minimum (thermodynamic or kinetic control). Catalysts can be used to manipulate kinetic control, lowering activation energies to influence reaction outcomes. However, such chemistry is still constrained by the shape of one-dimensional reaction coordinates. Coupling synthesis to an orthogonal energy input can allow ratcheting of chemical reaction outcomes, reminiscent of the ways that molecular machines ratchet random thermal motion to bias conformational dynamics. This fundamentally distinct approach to synthesis allows multi-dimensional potential energy surfaces to be navigated, enabling reaction outcomes that cannot be achieved under conventional kinetic or thermodynamic control. In this Review, we discuss how ratcheted synthesis is ubiquitous throughout biology and consider how chemists might harness ratchet mechanisms to accelerate catalysis, drive chemical reactions uphill and programme complex reaction sequences.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(44): 20153-20164, 2022 11 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36286995

RESUMO

Chemically fueled autonomous molecular machines are catalysis-driven systems governed by Brownian information ratchet mechanisms. One fundamental principle behind their operation is kinetic asymmetry, which quantifies the directionality of molecular motors. However, it is difficult for synthetic chemists to apply this concept to molecular design because kinetic asymmetry is usually introduced in abstract mathematical terms involving experimentally inaccessible parameters. Furthermore, two seemingly contradictory mechanisms have been proposed for chemically driven autonomous molecular machines: Brownian ratchet and power stroke mechanisms. This Perspective addresses both these issues, providing accessible and experimentally useful design principles for catalysis-driven molecular machinery. We relate kinetic asymmetry to the Curtin-Hammett principle using a synthetic rotary motor and a kinesin walker as illustrative examples. Our approach describes these molecular motors in terms of the Brownian ratchet mechanism but pinpoints both chemical gating and power strokes as tunable design elements that can affect kinetic asymmetry. We explain why this approach to kinetic asymmetry is consistent with previous ones and outline conditions where power strokes can be useful design elements. Finally, we discuss the role of information, a concept used with different meanings in the literature. We hope that this Perspective will be accessible to a broad range of chemists, clarifying the parameters that can be usefully controlled in the design and synthesis of molecular machines and related systems. It may also aid a more comprehensive and interdisciplinary understanding of biomolecular machinery.


Assuntos
Cinética , Catálise
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(37): 17241-17248, 2022 09 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36074864

RESUMO

Autonomous chemically fueled molecular machines that function through information ratchet mechanisms underpin the nonequilibrium processes that sustain life. These biomolecular motors have evolved to be well-suited to the tasks they perform. Synthetic systems that function through similar mechanisms have recently been developed, and their minimalist structures enable the influence of structural changes on machine performance to be assessed. Here, we probe the effect of changes in the fuel and barrier-forming species on the nonequilibrium operation of a carbodiimide-fueled rotaxane-based information ratchet. We examine the machine's ability to catalyze the fuel-to-waste reaction and harness energy from it to drive directional displacement of the macrocycle. These characteristics are intrinsically linked to the speed, force, power, and efficiency of the ratchet output. We find that, just as for biomolecular motors and macroscopic machinery, optimization of one feature (such as speed) can compromise other features (such as the force that can be generated by the ratchet). Balancing speed, power, efficiency, and directionality will likely prove important when developing artificial molecular motors for particular applications.


Assuntos
Rotaxanos , Carbodi-Imidas , Catálise , Fenômenos Mecânicos
6.
Nat Chem ; 14(7): 728-738, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35778564

RESUMO

Chemical reaction networks that transform out-of-equilibrium 'fuel' to 'waste' are the engines that power the biomolecular machinery of the cell. Inspired by such systems, autonomous artificial molecular machinery is being developed that functions by catalysing the decomposition of chemical fuels, exploiting kinetic asymmetry to harness energy released from the fuel-to-waste reaction to drive non-equilibrium structures and dynamics. Different aspects of chemical fuels profoundly influence their ability to power molecular machines. Here we consider the structure and properties of the fuels that biology has evolved and compare their features with those of the rudimentary synthetic chemical fuels that have so far been used to drive autonomous non-equilibrium molecular-level dynamics. We identify desirable, but context-specific, traits for chemical fuels together with challenges and opportunities for the design and invention of new chemical fuels to power synthetic molecular machinery and other dissipative nanoscale processes.


Assuntos
Catálise , Cinética
7.
Nature ; 604(7904): 80-85, 2022 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35388198

RESUMO

Biology operates through autonomous chemically fuelled molecular machinery1, including rotary motors such as adenosine triphosphate synthase2 and the bacterial flagellar motor3. Chemists have long sought to create analogous molecular structures with chemically powered, directionally rotating, components4-17. However, synthetic motor molecules capable of autonomous 360° directional rotation about a single bond have proved elusive, with previous designs lacking either autonomous fuelling7,10,12 or directionality6. Here we show that 1-phenylpyrrole 2,2'-dicarboxylic acid18,19 (1a) is a catalysis-driven20,21 motor that can continuously transduce energy from a chemical fuel9,20-27 to induce repetitive 360° directional rotation of the two aromatic rings around the covalent N-C bond that connects them. On treatment of 1a with a carbodiimide21,25-27, intramolecular anhydride formation between the rings and the anhydride's hydrolysis both occur incessantly. Both reactions are kinetically gated28-30 causing directional bias. Accordingly, catalysis of carbodiimide hydration by the motor molecule continuously drives net directional rotation around the N-C bond. The directionality is determined by the handedness of both an additive that accelerates anhydride hydrolysis and that of the fuel, and is easily reversed additive31. More than 97% of fuel molecules are consumed through the chemical engine cycle24 with a directional bias of up to 71:29 with a chirality-matched fuel and additive. In other words, the motor makes a 'mistake' in direction every three to four turns. The 26-atom motor molecule's simplicity augurs well for its structural optimization and the development of derivatives that can be interfaced with other components for the performance of work and tasks32-36.

8.
Nat Chem ; 14(5): 530-537, 2022 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35301472

RESUMO

Information is physical, a realization that has transformed the physics of measurement and communication. However, the flow between information, energy and mechanics in chemical systems remains largely unexplored. Here we analyse a minimalist autonomous chemically driven molecular motor in terms of information thermodynamics, a framework that quantitatively relates information to other thermodynamic parameters. The treatment reveals how directional motion is generated by free energy transfer from chemical to mechanical (conformational and/or co-conformational) processes by 'energy flow' and 'information flow'. It provides a thermodynamic level of understanding of molecular motors that is general, complements previous analyses based on kinetics and has practical implications for machine design. In line with kinetic analysis, we find that power strokes do not affect the directionality of chemically driven machines. However, we find that power strokes can modulate motor velocity, the efficiency of free energy transfer and the number of fuel molecules consumed per cycle. This may help explain the role of such (co-)conformational changes in biomachines and illustrates the interplay between energy and information in chemical systems.


Assuntos
Cinética , Transferência de Energia , Termodinâmica
9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(11): 4414-4420, 2021 03 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33705123

RESUMO

We report a rotaxane-based information ratchet in which the macrocycle distribution is pumped away from equilibrium using a carbodiimide fuel. A carboxylate group on the axle, nonequidistant between two macrocycle binding sites, efficiently catalyzes the hydration of a carbodiimide fuel to the corresponding urea waste, with >80% of the fuel molecules reacting through the machine-catalyzed pathway. The energy of the reaction is harnessed by kinetic differentiation of the mechanical states of the machine driving the macrocycle to the binding site distal to the catalyst. Steric hindrance between the macrocycle and the fuel slows the reaction of the carboxylate group (to form a barrier to macrocycle movement) in the proximal co-conformer, whereas hydrogen bonding between the macrocycle and the barrier accelerates hydrolysis of the activated ester proximal isomer. The two directionally biased processes reinforce each other's effect, resulting in a doubly kinetically gated ratchet that achieves 1:18 directionality, an exceptional degree of selectivity for a synthetic chemically fueled molecular motor.

10.
Phys Rev Lett ; 126(5): 051301, 2021 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33605767

RESUMO

We propose a new type of experiment that compares the frequency of a clock (an ultrastable optical cavity in this case) at time t to its own frequency some time t-T earlier, by "storing" the output signal (photons) in a fiber delay line. In ultralight oscillating dark matter (DM) models, such an experiment is sensitive to coupling of DM to the standard model fields, through oscillations of the cavity and fiber lengths and of the fiber refractive index. Additionally, the sensitivity is significantly enhanced around the mechanical resonances of the cavity. We present experimental results of such an experiment and report no evidence of DM for masses in the [4.1×10^{-11}, 8.3×10^{-10}] eV region. In addition, we improve constraints on the involved coupling constants by one order of magnitude in a standard galactic DM model, at the mass corresponding to the resonant frequency of our cavity. Furthermore, in the model of relaxion DM, we improve on existing constraints over the whole DM mass range by about one order of magnitude, and up to 6 orders of magnitude at resonance.

11.
Nat Commun ; 8(1): 1195, 2017 10 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29084959

RESUMO

Cosmological observations indicate that dark matter makes up 85% of all matter in the universe yet its microscopic composition remains a mystery. Dark matter could arise from ultralight quantum fields that form macroscopic objects. Here we use the global positioning system as a ~ 50,000 km aperture dark matter detector to search for such objects in the form of domain walls. Global positioning system navigation relies on precision timing signals furnished by atomic clocks. As the Earth moves through the galactic dark matter halo, interactions with domain walls could cause a sequence of atomic clock perturbations that propagate through the satellite constellation at galactic velocities ~ 300 km s-1. Mining 16 years of archival data, we find no evidence for domain walls at our current sensitivity level. This improves the limits on certain quadratic scalar couplings of domain wall dark matter to standard model particles by several orders of magnitude.

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